Red Terror» in Greek Macedonia, 1943-1944

Red Terror» in Greek Macedonia, 1943-1944

«Qualestoria» n. 2, dicembre 2015 Collaborationism and «Red Terror» in Greek Macedonia, 1943-1944 di Vaios Kalogrias Abstract ‒ Collaborationism and «Red Terror» in Greek Macedonia, 1943-1944. In the autumn of 1943 the Communist-led Resistance organization ELAS established a monopo- ly on violence in the German-occupied part of Greek Macedonia. Its most important opponent, the nationalist Resistance organization PAO, was dissolved. Former members of PAO and other «reactionary elements» were persecuted and many of them were executed. But the victory of ELAS against «reaction» was not permanent. From December 1943 – January 1944 on hun- dreds of villagers took up arms for «protection» against ELAS. They created anti-Partisan units and collaborated with the German military authorities and SD. ELAS and the Secret Police of the Communist Party called OPLA practiced «Red Terror» against «traitors» and other «en- emies of the people». This paper will examine the relation between armed collaborationism and the birth of «Red Terror» especially in the last phase of Occupation. The focus will be on the motives and the structure of the collaborationist militia called EES (National Greek Army). On the other hand it will also ask if «Red Terror» was organized centrally as an answer to the anti-Communist action. Key words: Macedonia, Red Terror, collaborationism, EAM, civil war Parole chiave: Macedonia, terrore rosso, collaborazionismo, EAM, guerra civile For many decades the issues of collaboration with the foreign enemy and left­wing violence during the period of Axis’ occupation (1941­1944) were taboo in Greek his­ toriography. The political and ideological motives of collaboration were not discussed in detail, nor was there any exploration into the social background and the emergence of pro­Axis groups, because the cooperation of the Greeks with the Axis’ occupying authorities was contrary to the post­war myth of «national unity» (in the version of the right or the left)1. In 2004, the first conference was held in Greece, and when two years later the conference proceedings were published2, they documented that collaboration was a mass phenomenon and not a matter of a few «traitors» or the pre­war elites. They also made clear that Nationalism and anti­Communism were the ideological roots of most Greek collaborators3. The same ideology applies to the issue of left­wing violence because it points out that civil war clashes took place under Axis’ occupation and that large sections of the Greek population stayed away from the Communist­controlled resistance movement. Stathis Kalyvas was the first scholar who put «violence in the centre of the civil war research 1 N. Marantzidis, G. Antoniou, The Axis Occupation and Civil War: Changing Trends in Greek Historiography, 1941- 2002, «Journal of Peace Research», 41, 2, 2004, pp. 227. 2 I. Mihailidis, l. Nikolakopoulos, H. Fleischer (ed.), «Εχθρός» εντός των τειχών. Όψεις του Δωσιλογισμού στην Ελλάδα της Κατοχής, Ελληνικά Γράμματα, Αθήνα 2006. 3 M. Mazower, Συνεργασία: το ευρωπαϊκό πλαίσιο, «Εχθρός» εντός των τειχών, pp. 26­27. 100 Vaios Kalogrias agend»4. His articles about the «red terror» and armed collaborationism5 enflamed a Greek Historikerstreit. Kalyvas raised the question of the logic of left­wing violence and showed that it was centrally organized and not the result of spontaneous acts nor the work of zealous revolutionaries. In the light of the above, this paper examines the relationship between armed col­ laborationism and the birth of «red terror» – especially in the last phase of the German occupation – in the region of Greek Macedonia. The focus will be on the motives and the structure of the collaborationist militias and groups, especially by EES (Εθνικός Ελληνικός Στρατός – National Greek Army). On the other hand it will also raise the question whether «red terror» was organized as a reaction to the anti­Communist action or whether if it was based on a general plan for the repression of any kind of non­Com­ munist opposition. The main sources for this paper are reports of the Communist Party groups in Macedonia, documents of the Foreign Office and records of the Greek and German administration during the occupation. Occupation and Resistance movements After the invasion of the German and Italian troops in April­May 1941, Greece was divided in three occupation zones: Germany retained strategically important points like western Crete, Salonica and central Macedonia, the border area to Turkey and some Aegean Islands. Italy occupied the Ionian Islands, Epirus, parts of western Macedo­ nia, Thessaly, central Greece and the Peloponnese. The Dodecanese Islands were under Italian rule since 19126. Bulgaria annexed (without Hitler’s permission) eastern Mace­ donia and Thrace and set up a policy of ethnic cleansing against the Greek population7. In Athens a collaborationist government under Lieutenant General George Tsolakoglou was formed, but its authority in the province – where it existed – was very limited. King George II, the legal government and units of the Greek Army fled to Crete. After the German conquest of the island in May 1941, they moved to Cairo. In exile, they repre­ sented Greece to the Allies. The existence of a government in exile was a challenge for the legitimacy of the collaborationist regime8. But none of both governments was able to fill the political vacuum in the mountain areas. 4 N. Marantzidis, G. Antoniou, The Axis Occupation and Civil War, pp. 227­228. 5 Stathis N. Kalyvas, Red Terror: Leftist Violence during the Occupation, in After the War Was Over. Reconstructing the Family, Nation, and State in Greece, 1943-1960, ed. by Mark Mazower, Princeton/Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2000, pp. 142­183. Stathis N. Kalyvas, Armed collaboration in Greece, 1941-1944, «European Review of History», 15­2­2008, pp. 129­142. See also B. Petrov, The Problem of Collaboration in Post-War Greece, 1944-1946, «Études Balkaniques», n. 3, 2005, pp. 15­36. 6 On the subject of the Italian occupation in Greece see E. Aga Rossi, M. T. Giusti, Una guerra a parte. I militari italiani nei Balcani 1940-1945, Il Mulino, Bologna 2011. 7 On the policy of the Bulgarian occupation authorities, see V. Kalogrias, S. Dordanas, Die bulgarische Okkupation in Ostmakedonien und Thrakien (1941-1944), «Südost­Forschungen», n. 68, 2009, pp. 400­415. 8 P. Voglis, Η αδύνατη επανάσταση. Η κοινωνική δυναμική του εμφυλίου πολέμου, Αθήνα: Αλεξάνδρεια, 2014, pp. 44­ 48. H. A. Richter, Griechenland 1940-1950. Die Zeit der Bürgerkriege, Franz Philipp Rutzen, Mainz/Ruhpolding 2012, pp. 74­80. Collaborationism and «Red Terror» in Greek Macedonia, 1943-1944 101 Economic disaster, famine and malnutrition were the direct consequences of foreign occupation. In Athens some 35.000 people became victims of a mass starvation in the winter of 1941-42. The black market was flourishing, and social order collapsed9. Fur­ thermore, the reprisals of the Axis’ troops against the population beginning in October 1941, and the extermination of the Greek Jews in 1943­44 painted a clear picture of Hitler’s New Order in Greece10. The Axis’ terror enabled the conditions for the coming violence of the civil war. Under these circumstances, resistance groups took action. But only a few of them were able to build mass movements and to organize armed liberation struggle. The most important was EAM (Εθνικό Απελευθερωτικό Μέτωπο – National Liberation Front). It was established in Athens at the end of September 1941 and was led by KKE (Κομμουνιστικό Κόμμα Ελλάδας – Communist Party of Greece), which had some years of experience in underground work11. In April 1942, ELAS (Ελληνικός Λαϊκός Απελευθερωτικός Στρατός – Greek People’s Liberation Army) was established as the military arm of EAM and KKE. In the next two years ELAS controlled large moun­ tain areas from the ex­Greek­Yugoslav borders in the North to the Peloponnese in the South12. In this Communist­controlled territory the administration of the collaborationist Greek government was abolished and revolutionary institutions like «self­administra­ tion» and «people’s courts» were developed. No other parties than KKE were allowed to take political action. A health and social system was created, taxes were raised and the peasants were obliged to support ELAS with food. Cultural activities were engaged and the youth was organized in EPON (Ενιαία Πανελλαδική Οργάνωση Νέων, United Panhellenic Organization of Youth). The so­called «Free Greece» was a state within a state: and more than that it was the prelude for a post­war «People’s Republic». In May 1944, a «mountain’s government» called PEEA (Πολιτική Επιτροπή Εθνικής Απελευθέρωσης – Political Committee of National Liberation) would have been proclaimed. In autumn 1944, «Free Greece» wοuld have been extended to many urban centres including parts of Salonica and Athens13. In September 1941, another resistance organization appeared in the Greek capital under the name of EDES (Εθνικός Δημοκρατικός Ελληνικός Σύνδεσμος – National Republican Greek League), which had a strong republican orientation. In July 1942, its leading figure, ex-Colonel Napoleon Zervas, a person with political ambitions and also military capabilities, took up to the mountains. In a small area in northwestern Greece 9 M. Mazower, Inside Hitler’s Greece. The Experience of Occupation, 1941-44, Yale University Press, New Haven/ London 1993, pp. 20­21. 10 As regards the German reprisals in Macedonia, see S. N. Dordanas, Το αίμα των αθώων. Αντίποινα των γερμανικών αρχών κατοχής στη Μακεδονία, 1941-1944, Εστία, Αθήνα 2007. As regards the deportation and destruction of the Greek Jews, see In Memoriam. Gewidmet dem Andenken an die jüdischen Opfer der Naziherrschaft in Griechenland, ed. By M. Molho, Essen 1981. 11 C.M. Woodhouse, The Struggle for Greece 1941-1949, Hurst and Company, London 2002, p. 18. 12 H. Fleischer, The National Liberation Front (EAM), 1941-1947. A Reassessment, in Greece at the Crossroads. The Civil War and its Legacy, ed.

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